Climategate: A Scandal That Won’t Go Away
by Christopher Booker
If you were
faced with by far the biggest bill of your life, would you not want
to be confident that there was a very good reason why you should
pay it? That is why we need to know just how far we can trust the
science behind the official view that the world is threatened with
catastrophe by global warming because the measures proposed
by our politicians to avert this supposed disaster threaten to transform
our way of life out of recognition and to land us with easily the
biggest bill in history. (The Climate Change Act alone, says the
Government, will cost us all £18 billion every year until
2050.)
Yet in recent
months, as we know, the official science on which all this rests
has taken quite a hammering. Confronted with all those scandals
surrounding the Climategate emails and the UNs
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the political and academic
establishments have responded with a series of inquiries and statements
designed to show that the methods used to construct the official
scientific case are wholly sound. But as was illustrated last week
by two very different reports, these efforts to hold the line are
themselves so demonstrably flawed that they are in danger of backfiring,
leaving the science more questionable than ever.
The first report
centred directly on the IPCC itself. When several of the more alarmist
claims in its most recent 2007 report were revealed to be wrong
and without any scientific foundation, the official response, not
least from the IPCCs chairman, Dr Rajendra Pachauri, was to
claim that everything in its report was peer-reviewed,
having been confirmed by independent experts.
But a new study
put this claim to the test. A team of 40 researchers from 12 countries,
led by a Canadian analyst Donna Laframboise, checked out every one
of the 18,531 scientific sources cited in the mammoth 2007 report.
Astonishingly, they found that nearly a third of them 5,587
were not peer-reviewed at all, but came from newspaper articles,
student theses, even propaganda leaflets and press releases put
out by green activists and lobby groups.
In its own
way even more damaging, however, was the report from a team led
by Lord Oxburgh on the scientific integrity of the East Anglia Climatic
Research Unit (CRU). Two sets of evidence have been used more than
anything else to drive the worldwide scare over global warming.
One is a series of graphs showing how temperatures have suddenly
shot up in recent decades to levels historically unprecedented.
The other is the official record of global surface temperatures.
For both of these, the CRU and the key group of top British and
American scientists involved in those Climategate emails have been
crucially responsible.
Lord Oxburgh
himself is linked to various commercial interests which make money
from climate change, from wind farms to carbon trading. None of
the panel he worked with on his report were climate sceptics;
and one, Dr Kerry Emanuel, is an outspoken advocate of man-made
global warming. Even so, it was surprising to see just how superficial
their inquiry turned out to be, based on two brief visits to the
CRU and on reading 11 scientific papers produced by the research
unit in the past 24 years, chosen in consultation with the Royal
Society (which is itself fanatical in promotion of warming orthodoxy).
The crown jewels
of the IPCCs case that the world faces catastrophic warming
have been all those graphs based on tree rings which purport to
show that temperatures have lately been soaring to levels never
known before in history thus eradicating all the evidence
that the world was hotter than today during the Medieval Warm Period,
long before any rise in CO2 levels. Best known of these graphs,
of course, was Michael Manns hockey stick, comprehensively
discredited by the expert Canadian statistician Stephen McIntyre
and Professor Ross McKitrick. But the IPCC was able to defend its
case with the aid of another set of hockey sticks, based
on different tree rings, produced by Manns close allies at
the CRU.
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the rest of the article
April
20, 2010
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© 2010 Daily Telegraph
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